Egisheim near Colmar
The
Penance of the Count of Egisheim
There are but three ruined towers now left of the
once
proud Castle Egisheim, but the name of this fort and of the race which
inhabited
it are still preserved in the little town of Colmar.
Towards the end of the tenth century Hugo IV, Count of
Lower Alsace and nephew to Conrad II, lived at Egisheim Castle. His
beloved
wife Heilwig had died, leaving him one son who was called Bruno.
A wrinkled old woman came one evening to the
castle gate
and desired to be allowed to enter. She was a well-known fortune-teller
in
the country, and she wished to speak to the lord of the hall. But the
gate-keeper
refused her request, saying sharply that his master had something
better
to do than listen to her gossip. Just then the count himself appeared,
and
the withered old woman would not leave off begging, until he at last
allowed
her to tell him something about the future.
She examined the lines of his hand very carefully,
and
then shaking her head mournfully looked up at the count.
"You are a very powerful ruler here in Alsace, but
your
son will be even more powerful, and you will be obliged to bow down to
him."
The knight's features darkened, and with angry
words
he bade the gate-keeper dismiss the woman. The old witch went her way
ils
great anger.
From that day gloomy thoughts seemed to take
possession
of Hugo. He began to hate his only son, firmly believing that he would
one
day take possession of his dominions, treat him disgracefully, and
banish
him, it might be, or persecute him as the German Emperor Henry IV. had
been
persecuted by his son.
Every day his displeasure increased in violence.
At last
this gloomy father bribed his old steward with gold, and bade him take
this
child, who seemed born only to do him injury, out into the forest and
there
shoot an arrow through his heart, so that he might never commit any
evil
deed against his father. He would rather have no son than be the father
of
such a monster. The boy's heart was to be brought back to him as a
proof
that his order had been carried out.
The steward bore away the child thus doomed to
death,
and returned the same evening bringing the melancholy father a heart
covered
with blood, through which an arrow had been shot.
Hugo seemed at first to be relieved from all his
anxieties;
but his peace was not for long. His conscience soon began to trouble
him,
leaving him no rest day nor night. He spent his days in affliction and
sadness,
finding no comfort for his remorseful heart. Time wore on, and the
count
became an old man. At last the burden of his sin being too great to
bear,
he revealed all to the priest of the castle, confessing his terrible
deed
in all its horror. The holy father declared himself incapable of
absolving
him from such a crime, and told him he must make a pilgrimage to Rome
to
receive pardon from the Pope himself.
The knight, dressed in sack-cloth, set out in the
depths
of winter for the great city of Rome. On arriving there he threw
himself
at the Pope's feet, confessing most humbly his wicked deed. At that
time
Leo IX. reigned over the ecclesiastical world; he listened silently to
the
gray-haired penitent, and then covered his face in deep emotion.
The great Pontiff at last stood up and spoke in a
low
trembling voice.
"Be comforted! your son lives! God had pity on
him, and
the steward who was to have put him to death, was a merciful man and
gave
the child to some kind-hearted people to take care of at the same time
bringing
you a deer's heart as the proof you desired. This child was well taught
and
afterwards became a priest, then a bishop, then... I am your son!"
Thus father and son were at last reconciled. The
Count
of Egisheim died a holy death soon afterwards.
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